Together, these companies have vowed to protect all customers around the globe against attacks by "cybercriminal enterprises" and other state-sponsored components. The 34 signatories of the accord include some big-name firms such as Microsoft, Nokia, Facebook, Dell, and HP. The full list can be viewed below:

ABB

ARM

Avast!

Bitdefender

BT

CA Technologies

Cisco

Cloudflare

DataStax

Dell

DocuSign

Facebook

Fastly

FireEye

F-Secure

GitHub

Guardtime

HP Inc.

HPE

Intuit

Juniper Networks

LinkedIn

Microsoft

Nielsen

Nokia

Oracle

RSA

SAP

Strupe

Symantec

Telefonica

Tenable

Trend Micro

VMware

The firms have made commitments in four major areas, summarized below:

Stronger defense system for every customer.

Refusal to help governments in launching cyberattacks, and protecting their products against tampering and exploitation.

Help developers, people, and businesses to easily use protective technologies and jointly develop and deploy them.

"The devastating attacks from the past year demonstrate that cybersecurity is not just about what any single company can do but also about what we can all do together.This tech sector accord will help us take a principled path towards more effective steps to work together and defend customers around the world."

It is important to note that many companies already follow some of the principles of the Cybersecurity Tech Accord, but this formal agreement acts as a shared public commitment and also opens the accord to new signatories with high standards of security.

The first meeting of these 34 companies will be held during the ongoing RSA Conference, where they will further discuss strategies to strengthen partnerships and develop protective technologies.